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This is just some text over a background color.

The Basic Implementation

Orbit is going to be the easiest slider you've ever hooked up. Below are the steps, but for more detail checkout the playground docs.

Get some markup like this in your page:

Activate Orbit. You can embed the call in the specific page like this:

...Or you could just put it in the app.js file if you're using that.

You can even apply the class 美人纪摄影写真馆 to the 北京写真摄影馆 that contains the slider (Only For This Theme). The default slider uses the same method.

Options

Tabs

Tabs are very versatile both as organization and navigational constructs. To keep things easy for everyone we've created two main tab styles (simple and nice) as well as two variants of each - open and contained. With the base Foundation package, tabs of a particular format are actually already hooked up - no extra work required.

Tabs are made of 摄影写真社a DL object containing the tabs themselves, and a UL object containing the tab content. If you simply want visual tabs (as seen in this documentation) without the on-page hookup, you only need the DL. If you want functional tabs, just be sure that each tab is linked to an ID, and that the corresponding tab has an ID of tabnameTab. Check out these examples.

Simple Tabs

Contained Tabs

Contained tabs have a simple added class of 'contained' on the tabs-content element. What that means is the tab content has a border around it tying it to the tabs, and the padding on that container (by default) is one column on each side. That means you can still use standard column sizes inside a tab element.

Nice Tabs

Need something a little fancier? Nice tabs have some sweet default styling and can add a little polish to a prototype (or documentation). They can be both standard and contained, just like the simple tabs.

Vertical Tabs

You can also use tabs in a vertical configuration by adding a class of 'vertical' to the DL element. These are great for more scalable nav, and you can see how they work on this page on a tablet or desktop.

Mobile Tabs

To demonstrate how mobile navigation can work, adding a class of 'mobile' to a tab group will switch them (at small resolutions) to full width nav bars.

Forms

Forms are not a lot of fun. We've taken that lack of fun and dodged it with this ready-made code. In this release there are two sets of forms styles - basic and nice. Both are simple, both are flexible, both are easy to customize.

Forms

Inputs support a number of different base classes. Any text input has a class of 'input-text' and supports several sizes:

Inline Labels

Inline labels are accomplished using the HTML5 Placeholder attribute, with a built-in JS fallback.

Error States

Error states can be applied in two ways:

Using a wrapper for div.form-field.error, which will apply styles to text inputs, labels, and a small.error message (optional). This is ideal for programmatically generated forms.

You can also apply the .red class to labels, inputs, and also append a small.error.

Medium Input (with wrapper)Whoa, cowboy. Try that again.

Medium InputWhoa, cowboy. Try that again.Textarea This is a textarea
Inline Label Textarea Label for Checkbox Label for RadioDropdown Label This is a dropdown This is another option Look, a third option

Fieldset Header H2

This is a paragraph within a fieldset.

Standard Input

Nice Forms

Changing the form style to a slightly fancier version is dead simple - just add a class of 'nice' to the form itself.

Standard InputSmall Input

Medium Input (with wrapper)Whoa, cowboy. Try that again.

Medium InputWhoa, cowboy. Try that again.Large InputExpanded (Full Width) InputOversize InputTextarea This is a textarea
Inline Label Textarea Label for Checkbox Label for RadioDropdown Label This is a dropdown This is another option Look, a third option

Fieldset Header H2

This is a paragraph within a fieldset.

Standard Input

Custom Forms

Creating easy to style custom form elements is so crazy easy, it's practically a crime. Just add a class of 'custom' to a form and, if you want, forms.jquery.js will do everything for you.

The Foundation forms js will look for any checkbox, radio button, or select element and replace it with custom markup that is already styled with forms.css.

If you want to avoid a potential flash (waiting for js to load and replace your default elements) you can supply the custom markup as part of the page, and the js will instead simply map the custom elements to the inputs.

Foundation custom forms will even correctly respect and apply default states for radio, checkbox and select elements. You can use the 'checked' or 'selected' properties just like normal, and the js will apply that as soon as the page loads.

Radio Buttons

Checkboxes

Radio Button 1 Radio Button 2 Radio Button 3

Radio Button 1 Radio Button 2 Radio Button 3

Label for Checkbox Label for Checkbox Label for Checkbox

Dropdown / Select Elements

Dropdown Label This is a dropdown This is another option Look, a third option

Dropdown Label This is a dropdown This is another option Look, a third option

Adding Custom Forms with JavaScript

If you are creating these custom forms using JavaScript (via AJAX, JavaScript templates or whatever), you will also need to create the custom markup that Foundation typically creates for you.

Foundation detects any custom forms when the document has loaded and adds the custom markup required to make the forms pretty. However if you are adding these forms after the document has loaded, Foundation does not know to append this markup.

All the custom forms events are bound using jQuery.fn.on(), so you don't need to worry about event handlers not being bound to new elements.

Most of the documentation is by the 2015年普吉岛个人写真专业摄影师. It's awesome & I'm thankful that they wrote such thorough documentation for an open source project. Most companies would never do that.

The recipe for a Klassio includes a spoonful of creativity, a handful of UX, Foundation Framework by Zurb, and several cups of love and passion. Whether you view it on your Tablet, Phone or Computer, it will recognize the width of the screen and adapt.